Step 3: Add Flowers?

Step 4: Cool, Clear, Water...

These cactus, are work I did in 2004 before I left Los Angeles. Water is becoming a huge issue in the western US as it is in many places around the gl...

This is from a series of work I did several years ago in Los Angeles. Unfortunately I have no assembly photos but I just had to put this in for the Cable Tie Challenge and there's only a few hours left so verbal directions will have to do. Fortunately, it's pretty straight forward.

Step 1: Start with the Center

For any basket makers out there this is simply a coiled basket but with garden hose and cable ties instead of grasses and sinew.

For my center piece to start the basket I used a SS drain plate. The tabs on the bottom I bent outward in the middle to form a hook to hold the first row of garden hose.

Pull an end of the hose from the center of the coil and lay it flat against the cutting board.

With a SHARP knife or shears, cut the end off the hose at a shallow angle, about 20°, such that the pointed end is on the inside of the natural curve of the hose.

With the point starting at one of the slots in the drain, wrap the hose around once and start around the second time to the outside of the first row.

Fit a cable tie down through the second slot and secure it around both layers of hose so that the end of the tie points outward on the bottom and gently snug but do not tighten at this point.

Keeping the first coil tight, repeat this every other slot 2 or 3 more places. This should give you control of the coils.

Recheck and snug up the first row and tighten the ties in the order you started with but not so tight that you flatten out the coils of hose.

Add ties to the skipped slots and continue around and around building up coils each lashed down to the coil before it. Normally, if you placed the tie on the same side of the tie in the previous row, you would end up with a spiraling pattern of ties. For the cactus, if you look closely you can see that I alternated back and forth to keep the rows of "spines" vertical and perpendicular to the center.

Yes, but as I mentioned in another reply, the white cable ties and even the hose won't last forever outside. This is really just basic coiled basket construction and you can build up almost any shape you can imagine. Try googling "coiled basket directions" to see how it works.

Unfortunately these were projects that were finished and sold several years ago. I learned of the zip tie contest just a few hours before it was to end and had no time to create a new piece to show individual steps. I was as thorough as I could be with the verbal directions. There are a few clarifications in the comments but I think a skilled builder should be able to create a cactus from what I wrote.

Multiply the average diameter by pi (3.14) and then by the number of coils. I use 50' hoses. That will make a small one with leftover and the large barrel above used 2. If you finish one and need to start another, cut the end square on both the end and the new one so you don't have a gap. Make the joint at a place where it will be covered by a tie and don't pull it too tight. I rolled up some scrap 35mm film about a foot or two long and slipped it inside the joint to back up and support it.

This is pretty awesome! And in case it helps, there are cacti with black spines, so someone could make one of these and place it outside using the black UV resistant zip ties. Of course, it won't be as iconic as with white spines which I suppose is the cost of doing it that way. I suppose you could potentially risk it with the white and buy some time by placing it in the shade.

Oh, and I especially like the use of the handles/knobs for flowers. It's a very clever touch.

Thanks Angry. That would probably buy you a few more years but I imagine black ties will last longer but not forever and the hose will deteriorate too. Anything left outside permanently would be limited to just a few materials if you wanted it to last long.

I'm actually not sure, haha. I guess you will be claiming your prize. And Ive actually never won anything before, so I wouldnt know how to go about doing that, but i would think you would get a message with instructions. Hope it gets to you soon!

A note of warning. plain white cable ties are NOT UV resistant. People often want to place these in their gardens. But if they do, I'd place the life expectancy at about 1 year before the ties start to get brittle and break.

Black zip ties are UV resistant but don't look much like cactus spines.